This is an example of poorly defined property rights resulting in
conflict over negative production externalities. The pipeline is a negative
externality to the Native Americans because they would be left without
compensation for polluted drinking water and the destruction of their sacred
burial grounds. Perhaps the two groups could have negotiated to find a
Coasian solution if the pre-requisite of clearly defined property rights had
been met. However, this incident demonstrates that it is difficult for the
government to delineate property rights so finding a Coasian solution is not always
possible.
Sunday, September 18, 2016
Pipeline Protester: 'Our Rights as Native People'
In North Dakota, the construction of an oil
pipeline has ceased due to
the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe's protests. The Native American protesters oppose
the pipeline because it crosses sacred Sioux burial ground and additionally
they fear that it could pollute local drinking water. Energy Transfer Partners,
the company that owns the pipeline, was given full property rights to the land
by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, but the Obama administration stepped in
and halted construction of the pipeline so that the Corps can reevaluate their
decision to approve the pipeline.
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